>I don't understand whether its a man or a woman answering my questions in C/C++.
Why does it matter?

>I might end up referring you by "she" even if you
>are a man in case you don't answer this question.
Your solution is inefficient. By asking everyone's gender, you have to remember them all. And that list will only cover a fraction of this forum's members, so your solution isn't very effective either. Why not just refer to someone by name when you feel the need to use a gender-dependent pronoun?

Your solution is inefficient. By asking everyone's gender, you have to remember them all.

Not really. Since the gender imbalance is huge, all he has to do is to remember the two or three women among the active posters.

He could just go with my solution and call everyone "he" unless being explicitly corrected. The gender imbalance also means that this won't happen often. (This needs adaption, of course. On another board there's mostly women, so my default stance there is "she".)

All the buzzt! CornedBee

"There is not now, nor has there ever been, nor will there ever be, any programming language in which it is the least bit difficult to write bad code."
- Flon's Law

>Since the gender imbalance is huge, all he has to do is [...]
Of course, you have to know the genders to realize there's an imbalance, and it still doesn't protect you at all from insulting a new or less active member that you haven't encountered. I still claim that it's inefficient (because you have to remember more than with a simple guideline of avoiding gender pronouns) and ineffective (because the approach doesn't take unknowns into account).

>On another board there's mostly women, so my default stance there is "she".
Is it a programming board?

Sometime ago I made a public move on laserlight on this forum only to discover he's male and the avatar is of a female colleague at work.

Oh the humanity, that just ruined my week

On a lighter note, in Modern English, he/him/his is also the neuter. So unless the gender of the article is relevant to the discussion, it is perfectly correct to use he/him/his when the gender is unknown.

Originally Posted by CornedBee

On another board there's mostly women, so my default stance there is "she".)

That makes me wonder if perhaps there isnt a gender imbalance among programmers, but maybe just self segregation on to male and female websites

On a lighter note, in Modern English, he/him/his is also the neuter. So unless the gender of the article is relevant to the discussion, it is perfectly correct to use he/him/his when the gender is unknown.

Not anymore. The PC preference is to use he/she or him/her or to avoid it all together.

This topic reminds me of what I consider the first rule of the internet: Assume a penis until proven otherwise.

Some people who are actually she can take offense at being called he. Happened once here on cboard, as I saw it. Probably happened more times, as well. Might even work the other way around.
So the golden rule is: don't assume gender; use gender neutrality.

Originally Posted by Adak

io.h certainly IS included in some modern compilers. It is no longer part of the standard for C, but it is nevertheless, included in the very latest Pelles C versions.

Originally Posted by Salem

You mean it's included as a crutch to help ancient programmers limp along without them having to relearn too much.

Yes. I could take offense at people taking offense of such a common blooper.

But my position on these things is to never take them seriously, even at the face of an angry mob if needed be. I will never understand that kind of people. Male or female. Who cares if someone takes me for a female? I will not fell less a man if it happens.

Don't feel you owe anything to someone who gets offended if you make such a mistake.

Originally Posted by brewbuck:Reimplementing a large system in another language to get a 25% performance boost is nonsense. It would be cheaper to just get a computer which is 25% faster.